Supernova Explosions Stay in Form
These two supernova leftovers are part of a new study from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory that shows how the shape of the remnant is connected to the way the progenitor star exploded. In this study, a team of researchers examined the shapes of 17 supernova remnants in both the Milky Way galaxy and a neighbor galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud.
The results exposed that one category of supernova explosion, known as "Type Ia," generated a very symmetric, circular remnant. This type of supernova is thought to be caused by a thermonuclear bang of a white dwarf, and is often used by astronomers as a "standard candle" for measuring cosmic distances. The image in the right panel, the so- called Kepler supernova remnant, represents this type of supernova.
On the other hand, remnants tied to the "core collapse" family of supernova explosions were particularly more asymmetric, which is seen in the morphology of the G292.0+1.8 remnants (left). The research team calculated asymmetry in two ways: how spherical or elliptical the supernova remnant was and how much one side of the remnant mirrors its opposite side. In G292, the asymmetry is subtle but can be seen in elongated features defined by the brightest emission (colored white).
Out of the 17 supernova remnants sampled, ten were independently classified as the core-collapse variety, while the left over seven of them were classified as Type Ia. One of these, a remnant known as SNR 0548-70.4, was a bit of an "oddball". This one was measured a Type Ia based on its chemical abundances, but has the asymmetry of a core- collapse remnant.
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